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Getting Wright Right![]() Photo by Matt Coppersmith
The Willey House.
While not considered one of Wright’s masterworks, it is one of only three remaining Twin Cities Wright homes, and the design is considered to represent the watershed of the second half of his architectural career. It is the subject of an autumn exhibition at the Minneapolis Institute of Arts (September 29–January 20, 2008), rooted in a lovingly impractical five-year private restoration by Steve Sikora and his wife, Lynette Erickson-Sikora.
The Sikoras and crew reclaimed the kitchen to its original appearance (from a 1970s makeover), including Wright’s signature “Cherokee Red” linoleum and original 1932 GE refrigerator and Hotpoint stove. “The Net has helped a lot,” Sikora says. “Virtually all our sources for wood came from the Web. It’s how we found our custom brick maker in Tennessee.” He hasn’t added up the cost of the renovation yet. “I won’t allow myself to look at the number until it’s all done.” The home’s in-line plan is familiar today, with the kitchen open to the dining and living room, a significant departure from the compartmentalized homes of the period. Floor-length glass living room doors blur the transition from inside to outside. Before I–94, the Willeys enjoyed a spectacular bluff-top view of the Mississippi. Now there is freeway noise. Sikora says there are no plans for the house to be open on a regular basis, but “we’re talking about doing an open house with the MIA.” Sikora expects to open the house at least once, if not more, to members of The National Trust for Historic Preservation during its national convention in Minneapolis October 2–6. For more information, visit the National Trust for Historic Preservation.
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